Stepped-up Authentication

The holy grail of security policies since the introduction of RSA OTP tokens, stepped-up authentication is when the subject is presented with an additional authentication requirement, usually in response to perceived risk. As Jans How do you decide when to invoke stepped-up authentication? As Auth Server is not a policy enforcement point, or a policy management system, these two aspects are out of scope. But once you make a runtime decision that you need more evidence of identity, the OpenID Connect Authentication Request has a few features that can help you out.

The first is prompt=login. This is a hint from the Relying Party to the OpenID Provider that re-authentication is needed. Not all OpenID Connect providers support this feature (for example, Google does not). However Auth Server does currently support this parameter, although there is a feature request to make it optional.

The second is acr_values. In Auth Server, this provides a hint to the Auth Server to invoke a specific Person Authentication interception script. Typically, this would specify your workflow for additional authentication. If you are using Agama, you can also provide a hint for which Agama flow to invoke by adding __.

Another more esoteric strategy is to use UMA claims gathering. In this flow, the subject's browser is directed to the claims gathering endpoint (i.e. front channel), at which point the claims gathering script could invoke an OpenID authentication, using the prompt and acr_values parameters mentioned above.

If you want to see an example of how a client implements stepped-up authentication, you should checkout this mod_auth_openidc wiki page.


Last update: 2024-09-27
Created: 2022-07-21